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Showing posts with the label institutional knowledge

How does Institutional Memory act as a constraint on current Meaning-making?

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How does Institutional Memory act as a constraint on current Meaning-making? Why yesterday’s stories quietly limit tomorrow’s interpretations Big-picture framing Institutional memory is the shared store of stories, norms, and “how we do things here” that lives in an organization’s people, processes, and artifacts. It doesn’t just preserve the past; it shapes how people interpret the present. That means institutional memory can quietly constrain current meaning-making by narrowing which questions feel askable, which data seems credible, and which options feel “realistic.” In this piece, we’ll unpack how institutional memory guides sensemaking, when it becomes a trap, why the “five monkeys and a ladder” parable keeps getting retold, and how to work with memory deliberately rather than unconsciously. Institutional Memory as an Invisible Operating System Think of  institutional memory  as the operating system running in the background of a team or organization. You don’t see it di...